Legal claims defining the scope of protection, as filed with the USPTO.
1. A method for a user reading an image from a selected zone of a surface of an object with an electronic system, the method comprising: mapping an indicator information to a graphical indicator that has a visually negligible size, the graphical indicator comprising a plurality of state zones for selectively respectively storing a plurality of graphical micro-units, and each of the state zones selecting a state from at least two candidate states; affixing the graphical indicator onto the surface of the object; and the electronic system retrieving the graphical indicator and outputting an additional information from the graphical indicator; wherein the surface of the object comprises a main information which overlaps and co-exists with the graphical micro-units are negligible when the user observes the main information; wherein each graphical micro-unit is printed in an ink that substantially absorbs infrared ray, and the main information is printed in an ink that hardly absorbs infrared ray; and wherein the ink is a black oil ink, and the main information is printed in a Near-K ink that comprises an ink hardly absorbing infrared ray.
2. The method of claim 1 , wherein each graphical indicator occupies very small amount of area, and each graphical micro-unit occupies very small amount of area, and number of graphical micro-units of each graphical indicator is substantially equal to each other.
3. The method of claim 1 , wherein each square centimeter of the selected zone includes more than 3000 state zones of which less than seventy percent are in the first state, and percentage of area occupied by the graphical micro-unit in the state zone is less than 80.
4. The method of claim 1 , wherein each square centimeter of the selected zone includes more than 6000 state zones of which less than seventy percent are in the first state, and percentage of area occupied by the graphical micro-unit in the state zone is less than 80.
5. The method of claim 1 , wherein the surface of the object comprises multiple index zones, each index zone corresponding to one index value, and multiple identical graphical indicators are arranged in each index zone.
6. The method of claim 1 , wherein the object is a printable vehicle and the graphical indicator is affixed onto the surface of the printable vehicle by printing.
7. The method of claim 1 , wherein the graphical indicator is recorded in a vehicle that is affixed onto the surface of the object.
8. The method of claim 1 , wherein the graphical indicator comprises a header information and a content information, each header information within each graphical indicator is capable of distinguishing the corresponding graphical indicator from adjacent graphical indicators and indicating the orientation of the corresponding graphical indicator to the optical device.
9. A method for a user reading an image from a selected zone of a surface of an object with an electronic system, the method comprising: mapping an indicator information to a graphical indicator that has a visually negligible size, the graphical indicator comprising a plurality of state zones for selectively respectively storing a plurality of graphical micro-units, and each of the state zones selecting a state from at least two candidate states; affixing the graphical indicator onto the surface of the object; and the electronic system retrieving the graphical indicator and outputting an additional information from the graphical indicator; wherein the surface of the object comprises a main information which overlaps and co-exists with the graphical micro-units are negligible when the user observes the main information; wherein each graphical micro-unit is printed in an ink that substantially absorbs infrared ray, and the main information is printed in an ink that hardly absorbs infrared ray; and wherein each graphical micro-unit is printed in the Black (K) primitive color ink, and the main information is printed in the Cyan (C), Magenta (M), Yellow (Y) primitive color ink, or a combination thereof.
Unknown
August 30, 2011
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